
How to DAO
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How to DAO
@HowToDAObook
Helping founders and enterprises move onchain with clarity. How To DAO breaks down the tools, models, and mindset of internet-native organizations.


I co-founded @Gitcoin in 2017. Today I went to gitcoin.co and realized it has quietly become something new: a community-curated playbook for crowdfunding the Ethereum and AI ecosystems. Which honestly feels like the natural next step. Some of the latest trends: 1/ Quadratic Funding is now basic infrastructure. Hundreds of rounds. Dozens of forks. Anyone can spin up a QF deployment. The hard question is no longer how to run QF. It is when to use it versus retro funding, milestone grants, or something else. 2/ The funding design space is exploding. QF. RetroPGF. Hypercerts. Conviction voting. Streaming. Milestone-based funding. Vaults. Outcome-based rewards. Hybrid models. & more. This is becoming a full capital allocation design space, not a single product. Checkout gitcoin.co/mechanisms 3/ $60M+ distributed created a dataset. Gitcoin learned more from what failed than what worked. In a world where you can spin up a new funding mechanism in a weekend, institutional knowledge becomes the real moat. 4/ Funding is shifting from rounds to flows. Grant rounds create bottlenecks and funding gaps. New experiments are moving toward continuous funding, streaming, and always-on allocation systems. 5/ The source of capital matters as much as the mechanism. Donations were the bootstrap phase. The next era is structural capital: yield, protocol revenues, treasuries, and mechanisms that create recurring funding for public goods. 6/ Getting upside in funded projects is becoming a meta. Pure donations are giving way to hybrid models where funders can share in the upside. Hypercerts, retro rewards, token allocations, and other mechanisms are blurring the line between grants and investment. 7/ AI-driven capital allocation is emerging. As the design space explodes, humans alone cannot evaluate everything. AI systems will increasingly help surface projects, analyze impact, simulate mechanisms, and guide allocation decisions. 8/ Capital allocation infrastructure is becoming its own industry. Designing mechanisms, running experiments, publishing results, and mapping the space is becoming a core layer of the ecosystem. Mechanisms are getting cheaper to deploy. Which means the scarce resource is not mechanisms. It is maps of: • which mechanisms work at which stage of a project • which governance structures reduce capture • which incentive models actually produce public goods So maybe @Gitcoin’s most important role in 2026 is not running funding rounds. Maybe it is helping the ecosystem learn how to fund itself. More @ gitcoin.co



Announcing the Multi-Agent Hackathon 2025 👾👾👾 Join us next Saturday in San Francisco to build the next generation of agentic applications powered by multi-agent systems in finance, healthcare, and other industries. Time: September 27, 2025 | 11:00 AM - 10:00 PM Location: Mission District, San Francisco In collaboration with @daosdotfun Learn more ⬇️ 🧵









How did we end up polling on Discord for Nepal’s next leader? Here’s a rundown: tldr; Nepali government was overthrown in 48 hours and I think i just witnessed the first internet native revolution. Over two decades ago, Nepali citizens overthrew the Monarchy to establish a multiparty democracy hoping for a better future. However, two decades later, the leaders of three major democratic parties, who overthrew the monarchy, were still fighting for power and greed. They went from no slippers on their feet to living in lavish mansions, but the common men were still poor, with no sign of improvements. However, something changed from around late 2010s. People who relied on national TV and radio for their information started getting wide access to internet. People could see every mishaps these politicians made in real time, every frustrated candid stories of every Nepali citizens, and the rapid development of every other country that used to be on a similar level to Nepal. Frustration started accumulating rapidly among people, all enabled by the internet. Fast forward to around August 2025, Nepali youths, frustrated by the corruption and incompetencies of the government, started a trend on TikTok called "Nepo Babies" where they created reels comparing the lavish lifestyle of politicians' kids with common citizens of Nepal who couldn't even afford a proper restaurant meal. This exposé got widespread traction on TikTok and Instagram, which infuriated all the citizens of Nepal who had already lost hope from the current politicians. Everyone started cyberbullying their kids for their lifestyle. Coincidentally, Nepali government imposed a ban on almost all major social media sites on September 4th 2025 saying they need to register their entities in Nepal and follow a strict content moderation rule imposed by the government, which obviously, these sites declined to. The problem is over 20% population of Nepal resides outside the country and suddenly they had no proper way to communicate with their relatives back home. This lack of empathy, combined by the suspicious timing around the rise of nepo baby trend and a long standing disappointment in the current establishment was too much for everyone. Suddenly, on September 5th, a call for a peaceful protest on September 8th started circulating on TikTok, Reddit, Discord, Instagram, etc. What’s interesting is, this was a decentralized protest, all organized via internet without any central figure. Since it was organized collectively by youths on internet, this protest was given the title of “Gen-Z protest.” A huge 12,000+ mass appeared on September 8th protest. It started peaceful, but things suddenly got violent. The government gave an order to shoot which led to the death of 20+ people and 300+ injuries by end of the day. Gut wrenching pictures and videos from the protest started floating on internet which led to a widespread outrage against the police and the government. Later that night, Government gave a very lackluster and apathetic response to such a devastating situation. With this, peace wasn’t an option anymore. Reddit, Discord, and TikTok was filled with rage and call for revenge on September 9th. People started sharing tutorials on how to create a Molotov cocktail, how to disarm tear gas, etc. This felt like the heat of the moment, but no one expected what was about to come the next day. Next day, everyone from every part of country started coming out of their houses and protesting against the government. Around early afternoon, news started circulating on internet that a big group was headed towards the house of the Prime Minister. Then another group headed towards another big politician, then another, then another. All of their houses were burnt. Internet facilitated a realtime coordination for mimetic actions across the nation. This is why “burn their mansions” became the trend for the day within a couple hours across the country. Police force, who were already demoralized from last day’s actions and reactions, showed little resistance on this day. Almost every major politician’s house was burnt, and many politicians were even beaten brutally by the crowd, on streets, on rivers, and in their mansions. I was on Reddit and Discord all day. It truly felt like dropping at a warzone where everyone is coordinating attacks, sharing real time updates, and even telling which locations to avoid, etc. By late afternoon, the prime minister resigned and took refuge under the army alongside many other politicians. Army took control for security later that night and wanted to host negotiations with the protestors. The problem was, there was no representative for the protest. It was all a collective decentralized effort. So people started discussing and polling on Discord and Reddit on who should represent the protestors and who they should nominate as their future leader. It’s been a chaotic effort (who knew decentralization would be chaotic), but they’ve finally agreed upon who they want to nominate. Discussion between Army, the President, and the protestors is still ongoing, but it’s almost guaranteed now that the leader nominated by the Discord polls will take the position within a couple days. It was an unfortunate event where many things went wrong and the destruction pushed Nepal back by years, but the sequence of events were very unique, where almost everything originated and accumulated from the internet. The dissatisfaction accumulated for years on internet, and suddenly in two days, the government was overthrown, all coordinated via Internet with no central figure. In many ways, the protest happened on the internet for years, but the government didn’t listen. I suspect this pattern will emerge across many other countries now that the world has seen what’s possible. The Network State is becoming a real thing.


